Opinion
No. 5-326
Opinion delivered June 7, 1954.
1. APPEAL AND ERROR — TIME FOR. — Under 20 of Act 555 of 1953 a record tendered the Supreme Court on April 15, 1954, from a decree of April 20, 1953, was made too late, and the clerk of the Supreme Court correctly refused the record tendered him on that date. 2. APPEAL AND ERROR — DEFECTIVE APPEAL. — Where appellants failed either to file the record in the Supreme Court within 90 days from the date of giving notice of appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court, or, to apply to the Supreme Court or the Chancery Court for enlargement of the time, as provided in 20 of Act 555 of 1953, appeal to the Supreme Court is lost. 3. APPEAL AND ERROR — The Chancery Court could not extend the time for filing the full record in the Supreme Court past seven months from the date of the decree.
Appeal from Pulaski Chancery Court, First Division; Rodney Parham, Chancellor; motion for rule on clerk denied.
Moore, Burrow, Chowning Mitchell and Owens, Ehrman McHaney, for appellants.
Harry E. Meek, for appellee.
We have here a motion by appellants for a Rule on the Clerk, to require him to file a record tendered on appeal (See Rule 5 of the Rules of this Court, effective January 10, 1954). The Clerk refused the filing, in the belief that the record was tendered too late. Because this is an appeal admitted by all parties to have been attempted exclusively under Act 555 of 1953, we are delivering an opinion to discuss the applicable portions of that Act.
The controversy between the appellants and the appellee involved the validity and superiority of mechanic's liens claimed by appellants, and denied by the Chancery Court. Two separate decrees — each appealable - were rendered by the Chancery Court: one decree was dated April 20, 1953, and the other was dated July 9, 1953. We discuss these separately.
The appellants are Stebbins Roberts, Inc., Big Rock Stone Material Co., and Courtney Bldg. Material Co., Inc.
That each of the decrees is appealable, see Cooper v. Ryan, 73 Ark. 37, 83 S.W. 328; Parker v. Bodcaw Bank, 161 Ark. 426, 256 S.W. 384; McGowan v. Burns, 182 Ark. 506, 31 S.W.2d 953; and Carnes v. DeWitt Bank, 201 Ark. 1037, 147 S.W.2d 1002.
I. The Decree of April 20, 1953. In this decree there was the following language:
"And the Court being well and sufficiently advised in the premises doth order, adjudge and decree that no part of the claim of Courtney Building Material Company, Inc., Big Rock Stone Material Company, Stebbins Roberts, Inc., C. R. Hubbard, Arkansas Foundry Company, and/or Garner Smith, d/b/a Kraftco Building Supply Company constitutes any lien on Lot Three Hundred Fifty-eight (358) of Kingwood Place, an Addition to the City of Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas, any buildings or improvements thereon, or any part thereof; . . .
"It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the lien of cross-complainant Glen F. Rogers, Trustee, for the amounts heretofore adjudicated in his favor constitute alien on the property involved herein.
"To all of which, Courtney Building Material Company, Inc., Big Rock Stone Material Company and Stebbins Roberts, Inc., and the other parties to this action who are adjudged not to have a lien on said land and improvements involved, at the time excepted and asked that their exceptions be noted of record which is accordingly done, in which connection Courtney Building Material Company, Inc., Big Rock Stone and Material Company and Stebbins Roberts, Inc., pray an appeal from this decree to the Supreme Court of Arkansas, which appeal is hereby granted."
This decree (a) denied the appellants the superiority they claimed for their liens; and (b) awarded Rogers a lien superior to appellants and they prayed an appeal to this Court. It is repeatedly stated by appellants that they are proceeding under Act 555 of 1953, rather than under the old procedure that existed before that Act. Yet we find that it was not until August 5, 1953, that appellants filed the notice of appeal, designated in 2 of said Act 555. This notice of appeal was filed entirely too late as regards the decree of April 20, 1953.
By order of this Court of June 8, 1953, it was provided that until further notice, litigants might appeal by either pursuing the provisions of Act 555 of 1953, or by pursuing the appellate procedure that existed prior to that Act. But by Rule 26 of the Rules of this Court issued in January, 1954, it was provided that with respect to any judgment or decree rendered after January 10, 1954, Act 555 of 1953 was exclusive method of appeal.
If we should hold that the notice of appeal as contained in the last paragraph of the decree, as previously copied, was a sufficient compliance with 2 of Act 555, nevertheless, the appellants have been too late under other provisions of the said Act 555. Section 20 of the Act files the time for filing the record in this Court, and concludes;
We do not so hold. We leave the question open for further consideration. We merely state the possibility here in order to show that even so, this appeal is too late.
". . . but the trial court shall not extend the time to a date more than seven months from the date of the entry of the judgment or decree."
The record was not filed in this Court until April 15, 1954, which was more than eleven months from the date of entry of the decree. So, under 20 of Act 555, the appeal from the decree of April 20, 1953, is too late, even if 2 be not considered.
Therefor — as regards the decree of April 20, 1953 — we hold that the Clerk was correct in refusing the record tendered here on April 15, 1954.
II. The Decree of July 9, 1953. By this decree the Chancery Court distributed the proceeds of the sale, and the decree recites:
The decree of distribution was appealable, but did not present anew the question of the lien superiority which had been determined by the decree of April 20, 1953. See the cases cited in Footnote 2, supra.
"And defendants and cross-complainant, Courtney Building Material Company, Inc., Big Rock Stone Material Company, and Stebbins Roberts, Inc., object and except on account of the failure and refusal of the Court to direct payment of their respective claims from proceeds held by the Clerk of the Court as claims prior and paramount to the claim of Glen F. Rogers, Trustee, and ask that their exceptions be noted of record which is accordingly done."
On August 5, 1953, the appellants gave the notice of appeal from this decree, as provided by 2 of Act 555; but the appellants — so far as the record here shows — never applied to the Chancery Court to enlarge the time for filing the record, pursuant to the provisions of 20 of Act 555. Under that section, the appellants were required to either file the record in the Supreme Court within 90 days from August 5, 1953, or to apply to the Chancery Court for enlargement of the time. Neither of these requirements was observed.
Later, on October 27, 1953, the appellants filed in this Court a certified copy of the decree of July 9, 1953, and prayed that a writ of certiorari issue out of this Court for the record. The writ was issued on October 27, 1953, returnable in 20 days. It was not returned until April 15, 1954, and the Clerk thereupon refused to receive the tendered record. We have already stated that the appellants failed to obtain an extension from the Chancery Court. But appellants claim that under 17 of Act 555, they filed here within 90 days a copy of the decree of July 9, 1953; and that our certiorari was, in effect, a grant of additional time to bring up the completed record. Even if the filing of the certified copy of the decree here on October 27, 1954, gave us power to extend the time for filing the record, nevertheless the fact remains that no petition for additional time was filed in this Court, and no additional time was granted.
This certiorari proceeding was authorized by the procedure that existed prior to Act 555. See Bold v. Craig, 220 Ark. 880, 251 S.W.2d 482. But attention is called to the fact that under the new rules of this Court effective January 10, 1954, there is no such provision for certiorari proceedings out of this Court. Such omission is significant. Furthermore, in Bold v. Craig, it is shown that when the certiorari issued out of this Court, the bill of exceptions had to be approved by the Trial Court; and the bill of exceptions here tendered does not show that it has ever been so approved. See Blackburn v. Ford, ante page ...., 267 S.W.2d 519 (opinion of April 19, 1954).
In Malvern Brick Tile Co. v. Alexander, 222 Ark. 587, 261 S.W.2d 795 (opinion of November 9, 1963), we discussed portions of said 17.
The date of the decree was July 9, 1953. Under 20 of Act 555, the Chancery Court could not have extended the time for filing the full record in this Court past the seven months from the date of the decree; and we did not extend the time. The record was not tendered here until April 15, 1954, nine months and six days after the decree of July 9, 1953. So the record was tendered too late: and the rule on the Clerk is denied.
Mr. Justice GEORGE ROSE SMITH not participating.